[nagdu] clicker training was tripping on bones

Tamara Smith-Kinney tamara.8024 at comcast.net
Wed Dec 9 04:32:34 UTC 2009


Yeah,

The vi-clicker-training list is great!  Okay, so I'm a gzillion messages
behind,. But that's only because I'm still so busy applying what I learned
from the first gzillion.  /grin/

The link to subscribe to that list is

vi-clicker-trainers-request at freelists.org

What I really love about that list is the number of points of view on any
given subject, and the ways of expressing them.  If what one person suggests
doesn't work for you or your dog, you have ten more options to choose from.
Or you can always mix and match.  I thought I had a clue before I joined
that list.  Now I have a whole lot of clues and also know just how far I am
from know anything at all about what I'm doing.  /grin/

I'm the sort of person to enjoy exploring my own cluelessness.  Mitzi helps
me a lot there, too.  /grin/  She's grown up enough now that I find myself
getting gushy about puppies again.  Awww...  But she still makes it a point
to remind me who has the brains in this team!  /grin/

Tami Smith-Kinney

-----Original Message-----
From: nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf
Of Julie J
Sent: Tuesday, December 08, 2009 7:48 AM
To: NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users
Subject: Re: [nagdu] clicker training was tripping on bones

Tracy,

I don't know of any clicker books that don't focus on the visual aspects of 
clicker training.  That was a really difficult thing for me to get past when

I first started using clicker methods.  Beginning exercises are usually some

variation of click when the dog looks at you.  Poor Belle must have been 
very frustrated with me.  I must have tried a dozen nonvisual ways of trying

to figure out when her head was turned my direction.  None of them worked 
and I pretty much decided that clicker training was not for blind people.

Then someone suggested skipping the whole eye contact step and moving 
directly to a nose target.  Success!  We got that figured out in a manner of

minutes.  Things became much easier after I made the leap from doing exactly

what the books said to understanding the underlying logic and applying that 
in a way that worked for me and Belle.

I think any of the clicker books available are really good resources to get 
started understanding clicker methods, but for applying that knowledge to 
guide dog training, I'd highly recommend joining an email group on the 
topic. The group that Anne has on Smart Groups is very good.  There is one 
on Yahoo groups that is very good too, but my computer isn't cooperating at 
the moment so I can't bring up the subscription info.  It's blind and vi 
clicker trainers, searching Yahoo groups should find it.

HTH
Julie





----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Tracy Carcione" <carcione at access.net>
To: "NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users" 
<nagdu at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Tuesday, December 08, 2009 9:05 AM
Subject: Re: [nagdu] tripping on bones


> "Don't Shoot the Dog" is available from Bookshare.
>
> It seems to me to rely very heavily on seeing what is happening, though.
>
> Or maybe the problem is that Ben is smarter than I am, so he has trained
> me, instead of the other way around.
> Tracy
>
>> Rox!  I'm surprised that you, of all people,  suggest a P- solution to 
>> the
>> problem of inconveniently abandoned shoes!
>>
>> Albert, for a more "positive reinforcement-type solution--you might 
>> simply
>> try to notice the rare occasions when he tosses his shoes in the 
>> direction
>> of where you would like them to land, and immediately reward him with
>> something he really likes.  You don't even have to tell him what the
>> reward
>> is for; let him figure it out.  (This is the "sneaky" method.)
>> Or, for a more straightforward approach, you could identify the place
>> where
>> you want him to put the shoes, and reward him immediately whenever the
>> shoes
>> hit that spot.  In order for you to know when the shoes have "hit the
>> spot,"
>> you might want to have some sort of sound-producing device that will let
>> you
>> know that the shoes have landed on the spot!
>>
>> For tips on training all sorts of beings, Karen Pryor's book, "Don't 
>> Shoot
>> the Dog" is still one of the best resources, and very readable.
>>
>> Have fun training!
>>
>> Best,
>> Ann
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "The Pawpower Pack" <pawpower4me at gmail.com>
>> To: "NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users"
>> <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
>> Sent: Monday, December 07, 2009 12:45 PM
>> Subject: Re: [nagdu] tripping on bones
>>
>>
>>> Albert,
>>>
>>> next time he does it, just hide the shoes.  He'll learn quick!
>>>
>>> My dogs also hide stuff outside.  My current working guide, Laveau a
>>> Doberman loves her harness, she will take it to her bed and snuggle
>>> with
>>> it until it is time to go to work again.  I have to put it up  high so
>>> she'll leave it alone.  The other day I was getting ready to  throw my
>>> harness in the wash and set it down to collect more laundry.   In a
>>> flash
>>> she stole it and hid it.  I had to send my golden in to  find it, which
>>> she did.  Mill'E, my golden keeps me organized.  If I  didn't have her
>>> I'd
>>> be in a lot of trouble! *grin*
>>>
>>> Rox and the Kitchen Bitches
>>> Bristol (retired), Mill'E SD. and Laveau Guide Dog, CGC.
>>> "Struggle is a never ending process. Freedom is never really won, you
>>> earn it and win it in every generation."
>>> -- Coretta Scott King
>>> pawpower4me at gmail.com
>>>
>>> Windows Live Only: Brisomania at hotmail.com
>>> AIM: Brissysgirl Yahoo: lillebriss
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
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m
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>>
>>
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>
>
>
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